Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. McCleese

141 S.E.2d 755, 206 Va. 127, 1965 Va. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 26, 1965
DocketRecord 5904
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 141 S.E.2d 755 (Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. McCleese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. McCleese, 141 S.E.2d 755, 206 Va. 127, 1965 Va. LEXIS 178 (Va. 1965).

Opinions

Gordon, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

McCleese, the plaintiff, comes armed with a judgment against Virginia Electric and Power Company, based on a jury verdict for $16,-000, for personal injuries — sustained when a long metal rod or “squeegee” held by McCleese accidentally came in contact with the Power Company’s high tension wire. We are called upon to decide whether McCleese can keep his judgment, or must lose it or suffer a new trial.

The accident happened while McCleese was working on a ledge at the top of the Carolanne Farms sewage disposal plant in Princess Anne County (now the City of Virginia Beach) on June 30, 1960. On the top of the plant building are several tanks, with pumps and valves, designed to circulate the sewage. A catwalk reached by climbing a ladder, extends along one side of the building; and the flat top of the open tanks, adjoining the catwalk, forms a ledge. The ledge, four or five inches wide, is approximately one and a half feet above the catwalk. Strung overhead at the time of the accident, parallel to the catwalk and the ledge, were the Power Company’s uninsulated lines or wires, three energized wires (11,000 volts between conductors) and a neutral wire. The three energized wires were approximately sixteen feet above the ledge, and the neutral wire was approximately eight and a half feet above the ledge. (The energized wires were approximately thirty feet above the ground.)

Squeegees — used to dislodge sludge accumulated at the bottom of the tanks, by means of the blade or scraper attached at the bottom— were delivered to the Carolanne Farms plant shortly after McCleese reported for work on the morning of June 30, 1960, the day of the accident. Before that day, squeegees had not been used at the Carolanne Farms plant, nor had any squeegee been delivered to the premises; nor had there been located on the premises any other equipment that was sufficiently long to reach from the ledge at the top of the plant building to the overhead wires. Squeegees had been used, however, at the nearby Birchwood Gardens sewage disposal plant (which was under common ownership with the Carolanne Farms plant) and, according to the evidence, the use of squeegees is standard procedure at sewage disposal plants. The evidence does not [129]*129disclose how often squeegees had been used at the Birchwood Gardens plant. McCleese, who had been employed also at the Birchwood Gardens plant, had used a squeegee there “quite a few months, maybe a year” before his accident on June 30, 1960.

During the day of the accident, after McCleese received his squeegee — a three-quarter inch pipe, approximately twenty and a half feet long, with a handle across the top and a blade or scraper across the bottom — he was engaged in manipulating the squeegee to dislodge sludge from the bottom of the tank or tanks at the top of the Carolanne Farms plant building. During the afternoon, while standing on the ledge and bending over the open primary tank, McCleese raised his squeegee to remove something that had attached itself to the blade. As the squeegee was raised, it came in contact with one of the energized wires overhead, and McCleese was severely burned. (A “scalloped place” on one of the three energized wires, the middle wire, indicated that the squeegee had touched that wire.) The primary tank was sixteen feet deep with fifteen feet of water, and the bottom of the squeegee was still in the water when the upper end made contact with the wire. When the squeegee was inspected after the accident, burn marks were visible: two near the top or handle end of the squeegee, and one about three feet from the bottom or blade end. At the time of the accident, McCleese was holding the squeegee at some place between the burn marks near the top and the burn mark three feet from the bottom.

An officer of the corporate owner of the Carolanne Farms plant, who identified himself as the builder of the Carolanne Farms plant and familiar with the operation of that plant and the Birchwood Gardens plant, came to the scene of the accident on June 30, and again on the morning of July 1, to determine the cause. He was aware of the location of the Power Company’s lines, but paid no attention to them on June 30 — he instructed the plant superintendent to cut off the power for the plant and to summon the general contractor for the plant, believing that something amiss in one of the tanks had produced an electrical shock. On July 1, he was advised by the general contractor (who came to the scene on July 1 with an electrician) that the plant was functioning properly and the accident had been caused by contact between the squeegee and the overhead power lines. Before the accident, no danger signs were posted, and the plant employees were given no other warning of danger from the overhead lines, either by the Power Company or its representatives or by management or the foreman of the plant.

[130]*130When construction of the Carolanne Farms plant was begun, the corporate officer and builder of the proposed plant notified the Power Company that he was building a plant, and he advised the Power Company that if any information were needed, it could be gotten from his office or from the designing engineer. According to the evidence, no information was requested by the Power Company.

The Power Company’s power lines at the Carolanne Farms plant were strung on telephone poles, by the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia (acting for the Power Company), at some time during the period October 28, 1959 — December 31, 1959. A representative of the Power Company, called by the plaintiff, testified that the Company constructed its lines in conformity with the recommendations of the National Electrical Safety Code, and that the Code recommended vertical clearance of eight feet over buildings for lines carrying 11,000 volts, the capacity of the energized lines at the Carolanne Farms plant. (As already stated, the energized lines were sixteen feet above the ledge at the top of the plant building, where McCleese was standing at the time of the accident.) Apparently the exterior of the plant building, including the tanks and pumps and valves on the top, had been completed when the power lines were strung. Incidental work on the plant building was not completed until after the lines were installed; the equipment could not be tested until the current had been cut on. The plant was not finally completed until March 1960; but it was in operation in February 1960-sewage began settling in the primary tank in February 1960.

The evidence of the frequency of visits to the Carolanne Farms plant by representatives of the Power Company is: “I know they go once a month to send us a bill, but other than that I don’t know how often they come out there.” It is doubtful whether proof was admitted by the trial judge that the Power Company furnished power to the Birchwood Gardens plant, but we resolve that doubt in favor of the plaintiff and assume the Power Company furnished power to that plant, as well as to the Carolanne Farms plant.

The facts, as stated, are not contradicted by the evidence. We turn now to a consideration of the question whether the Power Company was guilty of primary negligence. If not, the other assignments of error become academic.

The following rules were laid down or confirmed in Trimyer v. Norfolk Tallow Co., 192 Va. 776, 66 S.E.2d 441

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marslender v. Virginia Elec. & Power Co.
37 Va. Cir. 199 (Norfolk County Circuit Court, 1995)
Harris v. Virginia Power Co.
9 Va. Cir. 179 (Richmond County Circuit Court, 1987)
Mason v. Arizona Public Service Co.
622 P.2d 493 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1980)
Foreman v. Atlantic Land Corp.
245 S.E.2d 609 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1978)
Ferriss v. CHUGACH ELECTRIC ASS'N., INC.
557 P.2d 763 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1976)
Larman v. Kodiak Electric Association
514 P.2d 1275 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1973)
Mississippi Power & Light Company v. Shepard
285 So. 2d 725 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1973)
Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. McCleese
141 S.E.2d 755 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 S.E.2d 755, 206 Va. 127, 1965 Va. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-electric-power-co-v-mccleese-va-1965.